Chinese Medicine Times : Keeping You Informed

Global TCM hiccups

Source: http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/747696.shtml

Eight years after graduating with a bachelor's degree in traditional
Chinese medicine (TCM) in London, 39-year-old Italian Giuseppe Demartis
feels lucky that his dream of working with TCM has partially come true. A
small hiccup is that instead of treating human beings, his "patients"
are pets.

Italian law regulates that only doctors with a Western
medical degree can become licensed to do acupuncture as long as they
finish a part-time TCM course, over two or three years. Giuseppe,
despite a full-time degree in TCM from Middlesex University, is not
allowed to practice legally. "It's a big problem, as in most of these
cases, the true essence of TCM is lost during these short courses," he
explained.

Tough reality check

Giuseppe
has tried several ways over the years to pursue TCM. He briefly taught
TCM basics at the Oriental Medicine Center in Milan and treated certain
psychiatric patients in rehab centers before opening a vet clinic
together with his business partner - a veterinarian called Fabrizio
Panzarella - in the heart of Rome.

Giuseppe says that, after
several years of practice, his blend of Western medicine and TCM has
proved to be very effective and has secured him a customer base from
across Italy. However, the favorite memory of his TCM healing career
remains when he helped a patient, who was a relative of Fabrizio, who
had suffered a stroke. This had left him with a severe speech impediment
and paralysis of the right side of his body.

"His condition was
almost the same after spending six months in a top center and Fabrizio
asked me if 'my' medicine could help," Giuseppe remembered. He began a
daily course of specific acupuncture treatments for a month, after which
the patient began to speak, walk and even play the piano again. The
success on this case finally made Fabrizio, who was Giuseppe's friend at
that time and "completely skeptical of the true potential of TCM and
acupuncture," believe in TCM.

"We then decided to apply TCM and
acupuncture on pets. We wanted to prove to the public and scientific
community that animals do not have a placebo effect as they don't know
the difference between acupuncture or an injection of antibiotics," he
explained.

There is no sign of a foreseeable change in Italy's
legislation to allow people like Giuseppe to legally treat patients with
TCM. However, he feels he was luckier than his classmates as he was
able to stay within the industry while most have given up. Chinese TCM
educators say similar reality checks are common across the board for
foreigners studying TCM. "In terms of their professional pursuits, it's
usually not a smooth ride," Chen Feng, vice dean of the International
School of the Beijing University of Chinese Medicine (BUCM), told the
Global Times.

Established in 1956, the Beijing University of
Chinese Medicine started to recruit overseas students for TCM studies
one year later. Tens of thousands of overseas graduates have passed
through the school's gates, with 1,700 alone in 2008. But Chen says most
of them were unable to practice TCM, even after five years of study.
"Most of them ended up working in completely different fields, some
moved into herbal therapy and some are providing services for religious
entities," Chen added.

Compared with European countries like
Italy where TCM regulation remains unchanged, Chen said the wholesale
boycott of TCM in South Korea since 2010 has seriously dampened local
people's enthusiasm for this healing method.

"We have seen a big
drop in South Korean students over the past two years due to the bleak
employment outlook created by the current South Korean policy. It
dictates that TCM majors are not allowed to sit the exam for the license
to practice," Chen said. As a result, several large-scale protests have
taken place over the past two years led by those who see TCM as their
major and career pursuit.

But in the US, Canada and Scandinavia
among others, TCM, as an alternative approach for medical treatment, is
accepted on the condition that the practitioner passes a national test
to have the right to practice. But in markets where Chinese
practitioners coexist with their local counterparts, insiders say local
practitioners are always at a disadvantage.

"There are few TCM
clinics here in Ottawa that are run by non-Chinese people. Many patients
are not satisfied with the performance of local acupuncturists,
especially as many have only had 200 hours of training before setting up
shop," said Cai Songyin, the Chairman of the Ottawa Branch of Chinese
Medicine and Acupuncture Association of Canada, in an interview with the
Global Times.

Getting real practice

But
for Elke Johnson, a 51-year-old TCM practitioner in Berlin, Germany,
this is not necessarily true. Elke insists that the majority of TCM or
acupuncture practitioners in Germany are local.

As a German
native, Elke earned a degree in TCM in Beijing after seven years of
study. Thanks to Germany's reasonably open medical system, Elke opened
her own TCM clinic in 2002, covering internal medicine, herbal medicine
and acupuncture.

"There is a special license for so-called
natural healing practitioners. As long as you take the national test
that happens every half year, which is mainly about the basics of
Western medicine and the law, you can practice," Elke explained to the
Global Times over the phone. Besides TCM, Indian Ayurvedic medicine is
also permissible. However, none of these practices, including TCM, have
specific national standards.

Many older Chinese TCM practitioners
have been unable to pass this national test, due to lacking the
necessary language skills. But Elke feels the situation will be
different for the new generation of Chinese people coming to Germany.
Nevertheless, Elke doesn't feel that Chinese practitioners are superior
to non-Chinese, saying "it's a challenge for everybody."

If Elke
was the only Westerner in her class back in 1994, with the rest of the
overseas students all coming from South Korea, Mame Awa Ly Fall, as the
first TCM-major from Senegal, is very optimistic about her future as a
TCM practitioner back home.

Having received a full government
scholarship, Awa started to learn TCM in 2008 at the BUCM following her
one-year language studies in Jilin Province. Awa had once planned to
study conventional medicine in China. "But later I changed my mind. As
long as I am in China, I should learn traditional medicine here, I
believe it's a destiny," Awa told the Global Times at a café in Beijing.

Unlike
a former French classmate of hers, who returned to China to work in the
TCM field after failing to do so back home, Awa is determined to open
her own TCM clinic in Senegal in Africa.

Similarly to Elke, all
she needs is a license that can be easily obtained by passing an exam on
the basics of Western medicine. Given the relative prevalence of
traditional African healing back home, Awa is even more confident about
seeing TCM accepted there.

"TCM is based on systematic theories
that date back to thousands of years ago, and it's really effective in
many cases," said Awa. During the past summer holiday, Awa went home
with a full set of acupuncture needles. "I performed acupuncture on my
mother and other relatives. They all felt it worked very well and helped
soothe general aches and pains or solve problems like insomnia," said
Awa proudly.

Ever and present challenges

Thanks
to the widening global recognition of TCM, Chen says his school has
seen a big increase of self-sponsored foreign students especially since
the end of the 1990s. Before that, overseas places in TCM majors were
mainly restricted to exchange students sponsored by governments.

In Germany, for example, publications or pamphlets introducing qigong
or tai chi are readily available in pharmacies throughout the country.
"In general, people are more aware of TCM nowadays, it's much more
mainstream now," said Elke.

But challenges remain. One of them,
in Elke's eyes, is the wildly inaccurate expectations some people have
of TCM. "They simply believe TCM is a wonder drug or a miracle. You just
can't expect an overnight solution to problems you've had for 30
years," Elke added. She emphasized that, combined with treatment, a
changing of life habits is equally important for a good outcome. "In
this regard, Chinese people have a better judgment and understanding of
TCM," Elke added.

Her view is echoed by her Italian counterpart.
"TCM therapies take a longer time to kick in, but people here have
little patience and want to be cured in the shortest time possible,"
Giuseppe said.

While many African countries have incorporated TCM
into the national healthcare system, Western countries like Italy and
Germany do not usually have TCM covered as part of most people's health
insurance. The prices for acupuncture or herbal treatment are also high.
"The biggest challenge is to make people understand that TCM is not
only for the elite and rich," said Giuseppe.

At the start of her
TCM studies, Awa's international class used to have 10 students, but
only four remain today. "It's a tough major for everyone, but it is
exceptionally tough for foreigners as it demands a good understanding of
ancient Chinese language," Chen commented.

With graduation just
half a year away, Awa says she now wants to pursue a master's degree. "I
want to enhance my knowledge of Western medicine. Then, when I struggle
to explain concepts like qi,
yin and yang to my patients, I can at least be more accurate by
combining TCM and Western medicine in my diagnosis," she explained.

Back
in Rome, Giuseppe is trying every means possible to advocate the
integrated approach of TCM through his practice on pets and to get a TCM
voice heard in the veterinarian world. "I would love to run a clinic
for people too. But for now, I just want to make more people understand
that Western medicine can be used along with TCM, a medicine that works
on understanding the root cause of the disease, for a better result,"
Giuseppe said.